
Meet Colour Revolt, an indie rock band from Mississippi hitting the big time with the release of their second album, "The Cradle."

With its prime location on the first floor of Tempe's Vue on Apache and a menu that includes breakfast, lunch, a full coffee bar and a variety of sandwiches and salads, the quirky new Brosenbrus has become a popular spot for ASU students and Tempe residents alike.

For some, completing a novel is the goal of a lifetime. But this November, as part of National Novel Writing Month, hundreds of thousands of writers — including a few ASU students — attempted the feat in just 30 days.

When SPM guest author Shannon Beaver traveled to the border for a class assignment, she encountered two migrants — strangers, separated from their coyote, bonded only by their fear and desperation to come to America.

The Hawai'i and Pacific Islander Club at ASU is a home away from home for many students, who express their cultural traditions through Hula and Tahitian dance performances throughout the school year.

Last Saturday, neo-Nazi demonstrators and protestors clashed, leading Phoenix police officers to release tear gas and pepper spray on the crowd. As SPM walks you through the protest, meet a White supremacist who defines himself only as "normal" and a protestor who disagrees.

This Saturday night, the eclectic jazz-infused hip-hop band the Roots will compete against the contagious pop-driven (and formerly local) indie rockers Miniature Tigers.

Tempe Marketplace was a flutter with trivia games and interpretive dance competitions as hundreds of Harry Potter fans camped out to see the midnight premiere of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1,” from 4:15 a.m. on Thursday to 12:01 a.m. on Friday.